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  • Member You - Are your Decisions Based on Fact?

    Supplier Selection and the Importance of a Style Match
    Any software package you buy on the market has had its production cycle. It started as a specific development for a certain company and it evolved from there onwards. Behinds this process, behind the functionality of this package are driving forces at work. The fundamental choices and options of the architects behind the solution.Once you know these forces, you will not only know what you buy, but also what you will end up in the near future. Behind any solutions there are fundamental choices that have been taken.There are so many options you come across when developing software, that in order to manage that process any company will apply it own set of rules.If you can make these rules explicit and you can compare them with other packages (suppliers) you have found another mechanism to make a choice in the complex world of software and supplier selections.To give an example. If you are to select a package you will choose according to a main business driver. If you do n
    d?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are ne

    Oil Projects in India
    OIL PROJECTS COMMISSIONED IN INDIA1. Mathura – Tundla Pipeline: The 1.2. MMTPA capacity, 16” diameter, 56 km long pipeline was completed during Feb’03 at a cost of Rs.45 crore for supplying product in environmentally sensitive Taj trapezium zone.2. Replacement of Barauni – Patna Section of BKPL: Laying of 1.7 MMTPA capacity, 20” diameter, 110 km long pipeline was completed during March ’03 at a cost of Rs.85.50 crore as a replacement of corrosion prone old Barauni – Patna Section of BKPL.3. Koyali-Navagam Pipeline: The 1.8 MMTPA capacity, 14” diameter, 78 km long Koyali Navagam pipeline was commissioned in March ’03 at a cost of Rs. 19.5 crore. Originally a part of Kalol Navagam – Koyali crude oil pipeline, taken on lease from ONGCL and refurbished for use as a product pipeline.4. Viramgam-Koyali Crude Oil Pipeline: The 12 MMTPA capacity, 28” diameter, 148 Km long pipeline was completed in August ’03 at a cost of Rs. 134.00 crore to fulfill enhanced crude oil demand
    In an information rich society, too many people are still starving their decisions of enough of the right information.

    INTRODUCTION

    How do you know if your decision process is well-informed or ill-informed? And even if you could detect the clues of an ill-informed decision process, would you know what to do about it? Here are some ideas for how to get more rigour into your decision process by sliding a little further away from fantasy and a little further toward fact.

    CLUES THAT YOU'RE WITNESSING AN ILL-INFORMED DECISION PROCESS

    You can tell the hallmarks of an ill-informed decision process simply by listening for all the substitutes that are offered in place of real data, fact and evidence. Usually these substitutes go quietly unnoticed, or are selectively ignored. We either aren't aware that they are indeed poor stand-ins for good and sufficient information, or we remain silenced by our fear of the repercussions of publicly questioning them.

    The alternative is actually more frightening. Think for a minute about the consequences of medical researchers making decisions about introducing new drugs on the basis of a handful of test subjects, or of civil engineers making decisions about bridge design on the back of professional opinion, or aircraft manufacturers making decisions about fuel economy without thorough analysis of the impacts of changing the fuel system. It's not always a case of life and death, but if you can imagine the money and time being wasted on account of ill-informed decisions, then you might start imagining how different the world could be if that money and time were available for better use.

    If slaying ill-informed decisions is a crusade you're up for, then a skill worth sharpening is your ear for those poor substitutes for good information. Here are some clues for what to listen for, and some linguistic lances to prod with.

    VAGUE, NON-SPECIFIC CLAIMS

    When people are asked for an update or progress check on how their initiatives or projects or functions or processes are going, and they are ill-equipped to answer with specific data or evidence, you'll probably hear them say things like the following:

    "It is working really well."
    "We're tracking along fantastically."
    "The result was slow to get off the ground, but now it's up to speed."
    "Cycle time is too high."
    "That project is failing to realize benefits."

    Are responses like these really enough to enlighten a decision making team sufficient that they need interrogate no further? Hardly. They are too vague and non-specific, and they tempt all to snuggle up together in a false sense of security from which they either ignore what is really going on or make rash untested decisions. If you hear this genre of performance update dialogue, have courage to ask questions that dig for specifics:

    "What exactly is working well?"
    "How are we tracking, specifically?"
    "How slow was it? What speed is it at now?"
    "Too high compared to what?"
    "What kinds of benefits is it failing to realize?"

    OPINIONS AND HEARSAY

    When you've been around something for a long time, you get to know the way things work by the patterns that keep recurring. It is super easy to be seduced by the predictive power of those patterns, especially when it saves you effort. When uttered by recognised experts, opinion and hearsay shine like pearls of wisdom:

    "Obviously we have the best sales performance."
    "Our customers are very satisfied with our responsiveness."
    "That project is failing to realize benefits."
    "I think we've done a great job this year."

    Opinion and hearsay are dangerous when they come clothed in crisp words and confident tones. But they are fact no more than the Emperor's new clothes are fabric. It's a brave soul indeed that asks the dumb questions of those who are certain. Time and again, however, the dumb questions turn out to be excellent questions when they turn attention to concrete evidence:

    "How is it obvious?"
    "How do you know? How did you find this out?"
    "In what ways is the project failing?"
    "What leads you to conclude this?"

    LOGIC LEAPS

    The cause-effect conversation is a mainstay of management decision processes, but its familiarity doesn't guarantee its sensibility. "Cause-effect" is a simple form of logic connecting two results in a distinct relationship. It takes a keen ear to hear logic leaps in a cause-effect argument connecting the results of familiar performance attributes:

    "We've met our downsizing target and costs are rationalizing now."
    "We have improved customer loyalty because we implemented the CRM."
    "Several initiatives together have improved revenue."
    "Employee turnover has reduced because of our performance planning system."

    Leaps in logic of this ilk are a symptom of failure in the planning process to establish sound and clearly articulated hypotheses of which strategies are supposed to impact which results, and failure in the strategy implementation process to validate these hypotheses as early as possible with evidence of the real impact. Armed with common sense, curiosity and a coping strategy for the uncertainty likely to ensue, you can put a stop to long-held logically flawed beliefs about what really causes what:

    "How was the relationship between costs and downsizing determined and verified?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are ne

    Obtaining And Making The Most Of A Temporary Job Placement
    Finding a job today can be an extremely daunting task, especially if you are looking to change careers, have financial difficulty or have just graduated from college. You need to persevere because it is unlikely that you would ever actually get the first job you apply for, especially if it is the one that you really want. You have to have an edge over other candidates and have all of the necessary documentation to prove that you have that edge. As a result, a temporary job placement may actually give you the edge.Companies today have a tendency to go through agencies in order to assess candidate for temporary job placements rather than permanent contracts. There is a great logical thought bend this – they save money by employing an agency to do the work for them and can let unsuitable candidate go whenever they please because their contracts are only temporary. It also provides potential employees with a great advantage thoughPotential employees can gain a number of positives through
    ysis of the impacts of changing the fuel system. It's not always a case of life and death, but if you can imagine the money and time being wasted on account of ill-informed decisions, then you might start imagining how different the world could be if that money and time were available for better use.

    If slaying ill-informed decisions is a crusade you're up for, then a skill worth sharpening is your ear for those poor substitutes for good information. Here are some clues for what to listen for, and some linguistic lances to prod with.

    VAGUE, NON-SPECIFIC CLAIMS

    When people are asked for an update or progress check on how their initiatives or projects or functions or processes are going, and they are ill-equipped to answer with specific data or evidence, you'll probably hear them say things like the following:

    "It is working really well."
    "We're tracking along fantastically."
    "The result was slow to get off the ground, but now it's up to speed."
    "Cycle time is too high."
    "That project is failing to realize benefits."

    Are responses like these really enough to enlighten a decision making team sufficient that they need interrogate no further? Hardly. They are too vague and non-specific, and they tempt all to snuggle up together in a false sense of security from which they either ignore what is really going on or make rash untested decisions. If you hear this genre of performance update dialogue, have courage to ask questions that dig for specifics:

    "What exactly is working well?"
    "How are we tracking, specifically?"
    "How slow was it? What speed is it at now?"
    "Too high compared to what?"
    "What kinds of benefits is it failing to realize?"

    OPINIONS AND HEARSAY

    When you've been around something for a long time, you get to know the way things work by the patterns that keep recurring. It is super easy to be seduced by the predictive power of those patterns, especially when it saves you effort. When uttered by recognised experts, opinion and hearsay shine like pearls of wisdom:

    "Obviously we have the best sales performance."
    "Our customers are very satisfied with our responsiveness."
    "That project is failing to realize benefits."
    "I think we've done a great job this year."

    Opinion and hearsay are dangerous when they come clothed in crisp words and confident tones. But they are fact no more than the Emperor's new clothes are fabric. It's a brave soul indeed that asks the dumb questions of those who are certain. Time and again, however, the dumb questions turn out to be excellent questions when they turn attention to concrete evidence:

    "How is it obvious?"
    "How do you know? How did you find this out?"
    "In what ways is the project failing?"
    "What leads you to conclude this?"

    LOGIC LEAPS

    The cause-effect conversation is a mainstay of management decision processes, but its familiarity doesn't guarantee its sensibility. "Cause-effect" is a simple form of logic connecting two results in a distinct relationship. It takes a keen ear to hear logic leaps in a cause-effect argument connecting the results of familiar performance attributes:

    "We've met our downsizing target and costs are rationalizing now."
    "We have improved customer loyalty because we implemented the CRM."
    "Several initiatives together have improved revenue."
    "Employee turnover has reduced because of our performance planning system."

    Leaps in logic of this ilk are a symptom of failure in the planning process to establish sound and clearly articulated hypotheses of which strategies are supposed to impact which results, and failure in the strategy implementation process to validate these hypotheses as early as possible with evidence of the real impact. Armed with common sense, curiosity and a coping strategy for the uncertainty likely to ensue, you can put a stop to long-held logically flawed beliefs about what really causes what:

    "How was the relationship between costs and downsizing determined and verified?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are ne

    The Truth About Work At Home Job Opportunities
    The best work at home job opportunities are those that doesen't require you to invest money on them, are easy to do, you are in control of your time, its scalable and its profitable.But its not as simple to find a work at home job that you really like and its profitable. There are a lot of site where you can find jobs to work on, some of those are monster.com, careerbuilder.com, craigslist.com and many others.On those sites you will find many job opportunities on your geographic location and some opportunities to work from home. But sometimes will be difficult to find a really good work at home job opportunities.However you can work as a freelancer and find many other ways to get a job, one way to do it is to do a search on google of the specific job you want or skills you have. For example, if you are good at graphic design you can do a search on google for graphic design jobs graphic design freelance job graphic design forumsYou can also go to a graphic design we
    going on or make rash untested decisions. If you hear this genre of performance update dialogue, have courage to ask questions that dig for specifics:

    "What exactly is working well?"
    "How are we tracking, specifically?"
    "How slow was it? What speed is it at now?"
    "Too high compared to what?"
    "What kinds of benefits is it failing to realize?"

    OPINIONS AND HEARSAY

    When you've been around something for a long time, you get to know the way things work by the patterns that keep recurring. It is super easy to be seduced by the predictive power of those patterns, especially when it saves you effort. When uttered by recognised experts, opinion and hearsay shine like pearls of wisdom:

    "Obviously we have the best sales performance."
    "Our customers are very satisfied with our responsiveness."
    "That project is failing to realize benefits."
    "I think we've done a great job this year."

    Opinion and hearsay are dangerous when they come clothed in crisp words and confident tones. But they are fact no more than the Emperor's new clothes are fabric. It's a brave soul indeed that asks the dumb questions of those who are certain. Time and again, however, the dumb questions turn out to be excellent questions when they turn attention to concrete evidence:

    "How is it obvious?"
    "How do you know? How did you find this out?"
    "In what ways is the project failing?"
    "What leads you to conclude this?"

    LOGIC LEAPS

    The cause-effect conversation is a mainstay of management decision processes, but its familiarity doesn't guarantee its sensibility. "Cause-effect" is a simple form of logic connecting two results in a distinct relationship. It takes a keen ear to hear logic leaps in a cause-effect argument connecting the results of familiar performance attributes:

    "We've met our downsizing target and costs are rationalizing now."
    "We have improved customer loyalty because we implemented the CRM."
    "Several initiatives together have improved revenue."
    "Employee turnover has reduced because of our performance planning system."

    Leaps in logic of this ilk are a symptom of failure in the planning process to establish sound and clearly articulated hypotheses of which strategies are supposed to impact which results, and failure in the strategy implementation process to validate these hypotheses as early as possible with evidence of the real impact. Armed with common sense, curiosity and a coping strategy for the uncertainty likely to ensue, you can put a stop to long-held logically flawed beliefs about what really causes what:

    "How was the relationship between costs and downsizing determined and verified?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are ne

    Case Study; Improving Managerial Efficiency of Owner Operator Franchisees
    Managerial efficiency is often the stumbling block for older operator franchisees in large franchise systems such as; mobile carpet cleaners, mobile screen repair, mobile auto detailing, Mobil oil changing or even mobile decorating and interior design. No matter how hard you work to train your franchisees once they are out of field often they are overwhelmed with business and fall down in either scheduling or sales.In our franchising company we were able to fix this problem using creative tactics and royalty reduction incentives. From an abstract standpoint is very similar to tax incentives to give small businesses and middle-sized businesses to body from certain types of industries or to help allow for a change in overall policy by government. Below is an excerpt from a speech that I gave to a regional franchisee association within our company in an effort to help them help them selves in improving managerial efficiency;“. . .Also on the royalty reduction list will be the full cos
    How did you find this out?"
    "In what ways is the project failing?"
    "What leads you to conclude this?"

    LOGIC LEAPS

    The cause-effect conversation is a mainstay of management decision processes, but its familiarity doesn't guarantee its sensibility. "Cause-effect" is a simple form of logic connecting two results in a distinct relationship. It takes a keen ear to hear logic leaps in a cause-effect argument connecting the results of familiar performance attributes:

    "We've met our downsizing target and costs are rationalizing now."
    "We have improved customer loyalty because we implemented the CRM."
    "Several initiatives together have improved revenue."
    "Employee turnover has reduced because of our performance planning system."

    Leaps in logic of this ilk are a symptom of failure in the planning process to establish sound and clearly articulated hypotheses of which strategies are supposed to impact which results, and failure in the strategy implementation process to validate these hypotheses as early as possible with evidence of the real impact. Armed with common sense, curiosity and a coping strategy for the uncertainty likely to ensue, you can put a stop to long-held logically flawed beliefs about what really causes what:

    "How was the relationship between costs and downsizing determined and verified?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are ne

    Effective Public Relations Essential for Personal Branding
    Move over pop star "Posh Spice" Adams and English soccer hero David Beckham, the personal branding power of newly engaged Australian celebrity sports couple Lleyton Hewitt and Rebecca Cartwright could be worth up to $100 million dollars.In terms of public relations and effective public relations, their media performance this week in both print and television proves they have the potential to become a truly global brand and rival Posh and Becks on the world stage.Hewitt, who has undergone a lot of media training has earnings from sponsorship and tennis valued at $13.7 million per year according to the BRW Rich List.Their personal brand is definitely stronger as a couple because they are opposites that attract, and this is always very seductive for consumers in terms of marketing strategy.Hewitt’s values of the gritty, anti-establishment, anti-authority fighter appeal to the Australian larrikin in us all, while Cartwright’s youthful, wholesome girl-next-door image provide
    d?"
    "Is it possible that customers might not stay loyal, despite the fact we implemented a CRM?"
    "Which factors have the most influence on revenue?"
    "What size is the impact that the performance planning system has, compared with other factors that influence turnover?"

    THE CLICH?

    It could be just about the best attempt to inform a decision with no information at all. The clich?s, the motherhood statements, the cultural truisms of your industry or organisation, are all tactics of those too detached to even have their own opinion about how performance is going:

    "Customers are never satisfied. We just do what we can with what we have."
    "The goal posts are constantly moving, and we don't have enough resources to keep adjusting."
    "We're getting runs on the board."
    "No-one in this industry ever gets more than 80% on-time performance."
    "The call centre is best practice."

    What is the basis for such broad-brushed and sweeping claims? Where did they come from? Someone will need to take the bull by the horns, pin him to the wall, break it down and get to the bottom of it. Seriously, it's likely some stale beliefs need to be contested, and the current boundaries of knowledge need to be acknowledged:

    "Never? Has there never been a satisfied customer?"
    "Why do you say that customers are never satisfied?"
    "Which goal posts?"
    "How are the goal posts moving?"
    "What kind of runs are you talking about?"
    "What makes 81% so impossible?"
    "What defines best practice?"

    MOVING TOWARD WELL-INFORMED DECISIONS

    Challenging the dialogue of the decision process is simply about asking for evidence. When results are claimed, or success declared, or hypotheses taken as given, and no sufficiently supporting information offered along with, then it's time to test and probe. If no data or fact or evidence is forthcoming, two choices are available. Either wear the cost of gathering such data or fact or evidence, or wear the cost of making the wrong decision. Only one of these is the responsible choice to make.

    Rest assured, challenging the dialogue of the decision process is going to take you all into some uncomfortable territory where egos feel poked at, fears have to be faced, and more effort expended on the planning, implementing and measuring processes than hoped or imagined. But it is a job that must be done. And if you have read to this point and have witnessed the clues of ill-informed decision processes in your organisation, there's a good chance it's a job that must be done by you. "They" probably won't.

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